Only weeks after the city’s demise Montag, Granger, and the others regroup at the ruins to discuss the forming of a new civilization. Granger begins to lecture about how transparency and literary competence will form the groundwork of a great nation. He proposes that the group of scholars should work together improve the infrastructure the city ruins. Montag and the rest agree, but the dark, ominous clouds and haze still loom. The group disbands, but Montag stays along with Granger. Montag asks, “How do we ensure this society doesn’t go down the wrong path Granger?” Granger, with a smirk on his face, replies, “We are a group of scholars who have seen first hand how bad things can get without literature. Our demise won’t be in similar vain. …show more content…
“It’s nothing,” Montag quickly replies “I was meaning to ask you whether we should have people elected for certain positions under yourself?” “Hmmm. Possibly,” but before he could finish his thought something was ringing in his pocket. He quickly left after mentioning that it was important to Montag. Montag couldn’t fathom what could be of importance to Granger at this time. Montag thought something shady was going on, so he used his HPS (human positioning system) to locate where Granger had gone. He was deep into the forest. “What could he possibly be doing?” Montag thought to himself. To investigate, Montag slowly and quietly followed his trail to figure out what was up. He looks down at his HPS, but Granger seems to have vanished from it. Montag quickly came to the realization that something was up, so he retreated back to his coop to get his walkie-talkie. He figured he could intercept the signal with it. Rushing outside he turns it on changes a few settings on the device and success! He hears the faint sound of a conversation with Granger and someone dubbed Reltin. Reltin says, “If you burn the books and kill the people with knowledge of the books you’ll receive a handsome reward and a high position in our
"You might as well know all of us now."... Montag replies with "I don't belong with you," "I've been an idiot all of the way. " Grangers role in this text is like Harris Bergeron asking the others who will stand with him, and there are many people who stand with Granger, such as, Fred Clement, Thomas Hardy, Dr. Simmons, etc. this is like when Harris Bergeron is on stage and says for all those who want to be royalty stand with me or be my empress to the ballerina (On page
At the outset, Montag was consumed by the darkness. He was a fireman who started fires instead of dousing them. Asked how long he has done so. He replies, “since I was twenty, 10 years ago.” (5) All the time he was, burning book after book, not knowing the full extent of his actions; he was totally unaware of all the knowledge being destroyed at his hand.
At the end of the novel, Montag is not in the best place in his life. He was talking to Faber and he said, “this is happening to me” (108).
Fahrenheit 451 A secret friend, a lunatic of a wife, a rival foe, and a life full of lies. Guy Montag is a fireman living in a dystopian world where book burning is a custom and innovative idealism is rejected. Montag endures countless fires and hopeless companions to realize the corruption that is his civilization and the beauty of the natural and independant world. In the novel Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury reveals the ideas that a person known is a person loved and there is always good in something bad.
This is the first time Montag takes action and contacts someone with the intent of bringing back ideas. Although they do not accomplish much in their first meeting, the event is still significant because it shows his future intentions and his changes. “We have everything we need to be happy, but we aren’t happy. Something’s missing.” (78) Montag is no longer a servant to the system, but one who defies it and wishes to release the truth despite the government’s intentions to silence
Nevertheless, with billions of people packed into the earth, people rarely have meaningful conversations. It occurs to Montag that his wife hasn’t taken her ear thimbles off on two years, meaning that it has been at least that long since he has had a normal conversation with his wife. He also realizes that he didn't even recognise the men who came to replace Mildred's blood after she tried to commit suicide. He lives in a world overcrowded with strangers.
Finally, the city crumbles to the ground as a result of war, and the Montag and the group heads to the city in search of survivors. As the plot progressed in the novel, Montag’s perspective
In the futuristic book Fahrenheit 451 reality is turned upside down when heroes become villains. The world is blind to the evils that lay inside the government. The people who aren't are educated are hunted, and seen as insane. Morals will be put to the test, and although this book focuses on one man's journey through it all, it is very clear that the issues this fictional society faces could not be to far from issues what could happen in real life. Fahrenheit 451 is a direct representation of the theme man vs society and his journey to wake up the sleeping civilians of the United states.
This disharmony between inward thought and outward action catalyzes Montag’s desire for change, leads him to deeper introspection, and contributes to the novel’s central message that if one remains
(pg. 8). Montag does not respond, but it does make him think. After hearing this question Montag goes home, greeted by his cold, sterile home, questioning his life and whether he is happy or not. Later, Montag is influenced
Montag is a puppet in the dystopian society following the protocol and his inability to reason with what he is doing makes him gullible and dangerous within this
The government televises a fabricated capture of Montag when in truth; he escaped the Hound after he killed Beatty. Granger says to Montag, “they're faking. You threw them off at the river. They can't admit it. They know they can hold their audience only so long.
His contact with a 17 year old girl named Clarisse McClellan, an elderly woman who was willing to die for her books, and an old professor named Faber, help Montag start to question things and begin a transformation that takes him from the rule following, book burner; to an idea challenging, book reader
Montag’s main goal was to bring actual intellectual data back to everyone, and his main way of doing that was by stealing books, but he was unsure of how to change peoples’ views. When Granger told Montag that, “even when we had books on hand, a long time ago, we didn’t use what we got out of them,” Montag realizes that people must be taught over time, so that they can understand what is being said, rather than having it shoved down their throats. Wade learned patience by persevering and not giving up no matter how long The Hunt took. The first key took Wade, “five long years,” to find (Cline, 9). He had to learn that if he waited and focused he could eventually win The Hunt, and once he learned that, he
Fahrenheit 451 is a novel written by Ray Bradbury. It is considered to be dystopian fiction which is used to display different social structures throughout the book. Published in 1953, this story takes place in a futuristic city in the United States of America. Books are illegal to own and anyone in possession of them will have to get them burnt. That is the job a the firefighters.